A recent poll con­duct­ed by the University of South Carolina reveals deep racial divi­sions in the state over the death penal­ty and over the appro­pri­ate­ness of apply­ing it in the case of Dylann Roof, the white defen­dant who faces state and fed­er­al cap­i­tal charges in the race-based killings of nine black mem­bers of Emanuel AME Church in Charleston. According to the poll, 64.9% of African Americans in South Carolina oppose the death penal­ty, while 69.4% of white South Carolinians say they sup­port it. Blacks were also more than twice as like­ly to sup­port a sen­tence of life with­out parole for the church killings than to sup­port the death penal­ty. Nearly two-thirds of black South Carolinians (64.7%) said that Roof should be sen­tenced to life with­out parole if con­vict­ed of the nine killings, while less than a third (30.9%) favored the death penal­ty. 4.4% said they did not know what sen­tence should be imposed. The views of white South Carolinians were dia­met­ri­cal­ly oppo­site, with 64.6% say­ing they think Roof should be sen­tenced to death if con­vict­ed and 29.9% prefer­ing life with­out parole. 5.6% of whites said they did not know which sen­tence should be imposed. Monique Lyle, who con­duct­ed the poll, said the results reflect con­sis­tent oppo­si­tion to the death penal­ty among most black South Carolinians. Kylon Middleton, senior pas­tor of Mount Zion AME Church in Charleston, said the black com­mu­ni­ty’s oppo­si­tion to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment is tied to racial bias in the crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem, adding, We have been bru­tal­ized in this coun­try, there­fore, we can empathize with any­one … who would receive ulti­mate judg­ment.” A recent study of South Carolina’s death penal­ty found sig­nif­i­cant racial dis­par­i­ties in death sen­tences. For exam­ple, the study found that although 48% of South Carolina mur­der vic­tims are black males, those cas­es account for only 8% of the state’s death sen­tences. Earlier stud­ies also found strik­ing evi­dence of geo­graph­ic and racial arbi­trari­ness in South Carolina’s appli­ca­tion of cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. The new poll also found pro­found dif­fer­ences in the views of South Carolinians as to how they believed African Americans were treat­ed in the U.S. crim­i­nal jus­tice sys­tem. 82.3% of blacks say that the jus­tice sys­tem is biased against blacks. 59.5% of whites say it treats blacks fair­ly and 3.9% say it is biased in favor of blacks.

(C. Cope, Most SC blacks say Dylann Roof should get life with­out parole,” The Herald, June 12, 2016.) See Race and Public Opinion.

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